This is a video I found of 3D video recording, but it got me thinking about 3D FPV flying. Especially with Team Blacksheep kind-of flying, close to the ground or obstacles like trees, surely stereo viewing must add a lot and help determine distances. Is anyone doing this and is it worthwhile? Haven't got my Fat Sharks that long yet, but start thinking how it must be nice to fly with stereoscopic glasses and dual cam of course.
You need to be a member of diydrones to add comments!
Comments
www.Real3DFPV.com
-luke
WANT!
I think Panasonic 3D1 is better than Fuji , mine survived some hard crashes, I don't use gimbal on my mini-quad and still get no jello -O.I.S works !
here is example of 2d and 3d
https://vimeo.com/69826011
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=83pPR9m_gVU
I found the following link (via RC Groups) 3D FPV Cam
It says: "The 3D-Cam FPV uses two cameras to generate field-sequential 3D video which is compatible with most commercial 3D equipment. This video signal can be transmitted using standard NTSC video transmitters and can be recorded using a standard VCR or DVD recorder. Using 3D capable video glasses (like theEVG920 we are offering to our customers) or LCD shutter glasses and a CRT (or 120Hz LCD) allows viewers to experience the scene in life-like 3D. The depth perception provided by this 3D technology is a real asset when piloting aircraft remotely."
I think using the Oculus rift might be the solution to this. There must be some way to take the video from both cameras, warp both images and merge them into one frame then transmit it with a single vtx.
This might be a better video showing 3D Stereoscopic flying.
So maybe he's not the best pilot, but the 3D effect is there (if you can view it)